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Ryan Trawick

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A member registered Jan 21, 2015 · View creator page →

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Maybe a silly question, but you cite Silent Hill in the description; the whole selling point of those games against Resident Evil was that the camera moved (hence the full 3D), and you got some really wacky claustrophobic angles with it. I think, especially in Silent Hill 2, it served the same function as you describe: keeping stuff out of the player's view to scare them.

I'm wondering if the jam rules might instead mean that players have no control over the camera? Or do you mean fully static, OG pre-rendered Resident Evil-style static?

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This game was really enjoyable. I kind of wish the controls were a bit refactored; I don't think using the ability needs a dedicated button, you can just reuse the spacebar to trigger it since space doesn't do anything while they're moving about. I also think you should spend time making a mouse-only version of the control scheme as this would be a fun single-hand game.

I'd take another stab at the metrics/sizing of the game elements, I felt all the levels were too cramped and because of the solid walls there were only ever two or three places you could aim the cannon towards to do anything meaningful. Also stuff like spikes just take up too much space too, spikes are basically solid walls as well.

This brings me to my last point, spikes never did any damage on my characters, I wasn't really sure how the damage calculations worked either. I'd get rid of dodges entirely as well, it should feel more like pinball where you hit something and you do the thing, put the focus more on doing tight moves. I think moving elements in the level could add a layer of timing to the canon shooting, as it feels really static now. I do appreciate that the red line predictor is always 100% accurate though.

There's no real sense of danger, I didn't even feel like I had a limit on shots or that I was going to die so I could just spam shooting and win every time. The healer also never healed my dudes when she bumped into them, it also feels bad to push one of your dudes into spikes, even if the spikes don't do any damage. And the mushroom clouds didn't seem to do anything but they took up a lot of game space and the smoke obscured too many tiles behind them I think.

It's also unclear why, when I run out of balls, they all return to the queue. The level should be failed I think, starting over would let you try other strategies and make you focus more. It would also help you in designing levels to be more focused on what idea you want to convey to the player in each level.

It's a really fun and neat concept, DnD party of heros fighting with marbles, I think if you make the stats more readable and udnerstandable, and stackable/multiplicative, it'd be cool. I think the game essence is strategizing and getting all your marbles in the right spots then causing/seeing unexpected chain reactions. The lack of controlling the order of your characters is a detriment to this, as it makes every level feel the same, maybe try randomizing them. Character customization and upgrading between levels could be a lot of fun too, add build variety to each run. It could also be worth putting in a power meter for the canon so you can control more precisely where they land, like a golfing mini-game (again, adds more sense of timing and urgency). It might neat to have treasure in a cage at the top of the level, so you see what you win, maybe even sometimes character are caged and you get a new party member you get to upgrade. Think of your party as a bag of marbles, or a deck, and you only get to bring like 4 into each level. You could even "peak" at the level to decide who to bring and strategize.

EDIT: I got another idea reading your stamina idea. What if you get rid of the canon entirely and you flick each hero until their stamina runs out? So it's like a game of marbles with turns. Once all the stamina is out on all the heros, the enemies go. Kind of like Baldur's Gate/X-Com turn-based, but physics and more fun. So each character would be their own canon from their current position.

Hey, thank you for playing and writing feedback! Can you describe the camera issues more? What input were you using, web browser, and did you have a controller plugged in at the time?

Got filtered in the first pit, the control scheme is interesting, but I think bouncing off walls is too much, maybe if they grabbed and slid down walls instead.

The options menu also being jumping was pretty funny.

Nice art.

Really good atmosphere, controls really well. Nice UI.

The distance to the first objective is absolutely absurd though, I went for almost 20 minutes and didn't even make it halfway. The map being skewed and rotated is more an annoyance, constantly made it hard to know which way I was supposed to turn.

The spiders didn't do anything to me as far as I could tell but I avoided them anyways.

I got up on a highway and after following it for awhile a building stopped me as it was growing into and blocking the highway. I quit the game because I didn't want to drive all the way back, there's no way to go over the railing.

Really like your use of proc gen.

I think the gameloop needs to be shorter, or there at least need to be more dangers and decisions to make on the road.

6 filtered me but I understood how to beat it. Love the art and the gamefeel is tuned really well. I think some music would help a lot but other than that I really like what you got here. (Make the loading screens longer)

On the screen with the spinning cube you can go left and right to choose more difficult level packs. The yellow one has the arrows.

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Okay I figured out the door puzzle, feel dumb. I didn't notice anything had changed besides changing B to C. I'd add a wire from the generators to the terminal, as on my first playthrough I assumed the generators were to refill the energy packs after you threw them.

I know wires are a bit like yellow paint on usable stuff, but it would help connect the two ideas. As it seems like a storage closet and I just assumed they had chargers for the stored energy packs.

I like the new walk speed, I'd make it even slightly faster, but the pace is already way more engaging.

Game took about 40 seconds to start up and clicking on it made it go white as if it would crash.

I went to the options and unchecked TAA and it stuttered for ~10 seconds, rebuilding shaders I guess.

Toggling most options caused a stutter of 2-5 seconds.

Trying to type in the max FPS box did not work. Rather have buttons for each one or a notched slider if you won't let me enter my own value.

Controlling the tank felt pretty good, I feel like the head of the tank should counter-rotate faster than the body should be able to turn.

The first dozen times I shot stuttered like crazy.

Yeah the head rotating is way too slow compared to the arcade speed of the tank itself.

I don't really understand how the armor works, the tanks are around 32 pixels tall max from the distance they're introduced, there's no precise way to aim and target them at all.

I don't know if this is on purpose because I'm not a tank guy, but I feel like going reverse and turning should behave like a car. So going back and to the left should turn the rear-end of the tank to the left, instead of the right.

I think an improvement to the first-person view would be if instead of the aim cursor going back to the center while rotating (being world-space locked), it should instead just stay in place (screen-space) so I can rotate forever.

There's no screenshake or feedback for shooting/hitting anything, feels like that should be the main thing.

Oh I can RMB to zoom in first-person view.

It seems like the repair QTE is timed but the timer isn't visible? I failed a lot even though I was hitting the correct buttons, seems like it timed out? It'd be better if the buttons were randomized each time you failed.

The head turning is so slow I can't hit the infantry when driving by. They also continue to damage me in the next cutscene/tutorial text.

Died quickly in level 1, seemed a little too open and grid-like. Would like to see some more hilly terrain where you can go up and down and maneuver to obscure yourself.

The head rotation speed being so slow put a big damper on how much I believed I could win. It felt arbitrary instead of physical. Maybe some mechanical sounds would help if you really want to keep it.

The support Hunter dudes are cannon fodder that can't seem to do any damage before getting picked off. I echo everything GorriDev said. Seems like you put a lot of work into this but I don't really understand a way to play where I can do anything meaningful beyond dying.

It's also super slow to gather troops at the base, then take them out to the world to fight (and quickly die), and then it's slow to go back to the base and re-amass them. Too much waiting.

150mb for a web build is also absurd, maybe it's the audio files taking up most of the space?

Game asked for internet access from Windows's firewall thing.

Remove the disclaimer, it sets expectations that are not met and just puts the player on edge for the entire experience (in a bad way).

The walk speed is way too slow for how empty the spaces are and how few choices there are to make during that walking.

I turned vsync on and it still tore, I went back to the settings and saw that it was still set to off, I set it to on and hit apply changes and left. I came back to the options and it still said it was off, my screen continued to tear.

Picking up a new gun should auto-switch to it, most players would not know to press 2 and switching weapons isn't even in the options menu under controls.

After I got the gun I went into a room with three enemies, I killed one and the second one hit me and insta-killed me. This is pretty stupid because I walked through empty, featureless halls for five minutes before this point and I had no saves. I was playing on Normal .

I tried to reload and all the save slots were filled with level names and timestamps, but none of them loaded.

I quit.

Played it in Firefox and my mouse unlocked the first time I shot, so I couldn't rotate the camera. Reloaded the page and it happened again. Works in Chrome though, however if I press escape and unlock my cursor it can never be relocked unless I press escape again to pause and click resume. Maybe it's supposed to pause when you unlock your cursor?

Played the arcade mode for a bit, shooting the balls and seeing them fire a bullet that misses (because they were being rotated by my bullet) always felt super cool. Could not figure out how to get tokens, no screen indicator for how many I had, so I never bought anything and eventually died.

In the campaign I had to unlock my cursor for the computer cursor to work, so I guess the borked pausing came in handy.

I don't really understand why sprint has a limit and how long the cooldown duration is. The spaces are boring to walk through so sprint should just be on by default.

Tons of audio stuttering everywhere.

I kept holding LMB when I got the gravity gun and it kept shooting right after I picked something up, I thought it was a timed thing and was getting annoyed until I realized I can hold onto stuff if I only click instead of holding LMB.

I had no idea how to activate the B door, I tried putting the HL2 energy pack into the black holder thing to the right of the terminal, I tried putting it into the terminal itself. I gave up.

Took about 20 seconds to show the Godot logo, and that logo stayed for about 10 seconds, Windows thought the program was crashing.

All I saw was a grey screen and the Windows taskbar after that, almost crashed and then the game snapped in.

When landing a jump as the ground slug it snaps to the ground rather than landing naturally, jerks the camera.

Firing the first two bullets stuttered the game for 5 seconds each. The first ragdoll also stuttered the game for 5 seconds.

The unique control scheme is neat with the shooting, I like it. Didn't notice a time I would ever drop a weapon.

I'd like to know how to unpossess a character earlier.

If I press LMB and RMB at the same time while possessing someone they get stuck in an aim pose but drop their gun, fixes itself when I pick up a gun again.

Game stuttered for 10 seconds when leaving the first area and going through the hall with the boxes.

The room with the boxes has a dead drop that just looks like a shadow on the floor, add some sort of border maybe.

Almost zero air control makes the jumps off the pistons annoying.

It seems that velocity isn't retained when jumping off one of the white moving platforms, I could never make it to the piston in the corner and gave up.

Nice little Messiah-like I guess, use a more serious engine in the future.

The stuttering was unbearable and never let up. You should try prototyping some smaller rooms to test and experiment with different possession mechanics and puzzles you can do, right now it's pretty bare-bones, it feels like I'm playing a third-person shooter where the designer didn't put much effort into polishing the third-person controls because that's not the point of the game, but 99% of the time you are possessing someone, and the slug is very very boring to play when they should potentially have more navigation options than the humans.

Jumping adds a nice quirk to the VS gameplay, you could develop it in a lot of ways; hopefully more than just a timed invulnerability. I could see have two layers of enemies, so you also dodge air enemies, or even multiple levels of playing field where you go between them when overwhelmed. Longer hover times, etc.

The player is currently unkillable once you learn to jump and there's no scaling or power-ups so there's not much more to evaluate.

I'd be cool if the first time you play you slowly and inevitably get overwhelmed, time stops, and it just says press space, then the floodgates of possibility can open in the player's mind.

Congrats on making an Unreal game that doesn't tank my PC.

Took more than three minutes to get half the load bar full.

I like that it only counts as a fail if one falls over the side, better than a line height check.

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Nice idea, Katamari in space. I think you could have some UI or shader effect to show how close you are to objects, in Reizen I made "bullets" turn red the closer you get to them. It was just hard to judge distance and I'd often graze things I was trying to get. Maybe you could be a magnetic asteroid.

This points to an issue with how your camera is set up. Because the asteroid is in the center of the screen, it obstructs the objects you're trying to hit. So if you keep the camera angled so you can see what you want you end up going under it oftentimes.

I think this game could benefit from two views, a first person view, and a third person view. Could be a neat like, lowres space camera effect in first person. I dunno, maybe just try offsetting the camera. You should try 6DOF too, though players don't usually like that (see Egogia).

Tapping to move got a little better as I went on but I think it could be either less sensitive, or maybe just allow tapping forward to move camera-forward instead of on a flat plan, and space and ctrl won't be needed then.

I like the ending idea, I think it'll be really funny when you get an end screen saying how much damage you've done based on your size, how many people you've killed based on location, etc.

Maybe even, have the game be time-limited, so you gotta get big fast before NASA blows you out of the sky, maybe you can even go overtime and start dodging missiles while you get bigger, then you have to crash on missile launch sites, and a tiny part of you detaches to get big again. Could be a fun game-loop.

Your stars flicker like a motherfucker, I don't envy you, star shaders are cursed. I'd also play with the sense of scale a bit, the Earth shouldn't feel so small, but I get it needs to be arcade-y enough to be fun to collect stuff.

Hey, I redesigned how explosions work and I think they're a lot easier to figure out now. I also rewrote the difficulty curve to introduce new tiles in a slower way so players will hopefully be less overwhelmed.

Give it a spin if you get the chance!

For sure, I think now that the base gameplay works it would be interesting to add on some resource management, maybe even hand-design puzzles have have "days" you have to win. I uploaded a new build that adds UI for showing how close you are to losing, and a money counter that you can cheese and incrementally increase if you want. Not much difference, but helps a bit I think.

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Thank you for playing. I just uploaded a new build that makes introduction of new tiles much slower, I'd be interested if you find it any easier. I also completely revamped the combustion rules, so be sure to check the manual again.

Thank you for playing and leaving feedback, the capsule art and name definitely need work.

I agree that the game needs more space for immersion, I got too worried that players would be bored floating around with nothing to do, but perhaps setting up the goals more clearly would alleviate that. I was going for a Metroid: Prime feel but ended up closer to Banjo-Kazooie.

I'm glad you're so interested in the game, I was wondering if I should develop it further or not as the response hasn't been very vocal, but maybe the capsule art and poor writing is to blame for discoverability.

I thought this game was genius. I've been trying to do a 6DOF dungeon crawler forever and you nailed it.

It's on par with Portal as a puzzle game imo, but this is kind of the Narbacular Drop phase.

My main critiques are that I found the camera disorienting at first, I think it'd be nicer if it was centered on a point when rotating rather than being on an arm. Once I stopped using the mouse though I was fine with it, I had a better time with the keyboard anyways. Maybe adding a keyboard button to fire would be good too so the user can forgo the mouse altogether.

I also found the collision of where I could and could not rotate/walk to be rather opaque at times. Particularly the metal didn't seem intuitive that it was unwalkable, I think they had this same issue in Portal which is why they made the contrast between metal and concrete basically black and white. I also found the grey edge pieces didn't always connect every wall I could walk on, sometimes there'd be none and I could still go up it. This was exacerbated once the moving cubes were added as I couldn't tell what edges I could walk on, it seemed like maybe only the surfaces with the arrows could be.

I thought the floor lights/glowing cubes were lava at first so I avoided them for awhile.

Levels 8 and 11 filtered me, but it was alright because you allowed alternate levels to let you progress. Really good idea there.

I had a really comfy time with this, I think it's the best I've played so far this DD and I can't wait to see more mechanics and levels. I think you have a really good one on your hands.

It would be interesting to see if shooting an arrow straight above you could unlock even more puzzle designs; really take advantage of the 6DOF.

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Couldn't tell any difference between the classes besides starting equipment.

The charge up to attack is annoying, delayed animation doesn't feel good, jerky. It's also not intuitive and forces players to peek in combat.

Hitbox on thrown weapons is way too big, my throw would miss most of the time because it'd clip a wall that it clearly shouldn't have. Make throws more directed at least instead of randomly rotating the weapon.

The fog looks kinda bad imo, dithering doesn't match the rest of the aesthetic. Would like to see more color variation throughout the dungeon between rooms as it all looks the same.

I didn't know if doors were locked, never had any indication a key was used if I picked it up from an enemy.

Walk speed is way too slow, dashing way too quick. Sprinting always took a good half second or more before I'd start sprinting, felt like an input delay issue rather than designed as such. FOV increase on sprinting and dashing is gigantic and made me not want to use them.

Not enough weapons to complete a dungeon and they break far too fast. Punch range is pitifully low too.

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This is an incredibly well polished game, you'll make a lot of money.

Maybe it plays better with a controller, but I found it a little annoying I couldn't select stuff in the menus with A or D. It broke the game flow for me every time.

I can see it being really fun once you master it, but it's really fast to start with and hard to precisely jump like I want to, would be interesting if you implemented a slowed time mode just to relax it a bit. Would be an easy difficulty implementation imo.

Footstep sounds got a little annoying, maybe different sounds per level could be fun, it'd be easy to make each level feel a little more distinct with color and texture changes, don't be afraid to evolve the style a bit and stretch it in new directions.

I found the level endings opaque; why do they seem to end randomly? I want to fill in the entire board, let me do it, my OCD is begging you.

I was also never able to clear a stage without an enemy getting me once. Probably just a skill issue because I've never played it, but I found them very aggressive in the first few stages. It'd be nice to have a chill mode without enemies too because I'd legit just try to fill the board without repeat tiles as a challenge puzzle. You also don't make it clear in the tutorial that stepping on already cleared tiles will lower your stats, you only mention it in regards to the bonus mode.

I couldn't kill anything. The mouse controls are a good idea but the implementation needs work; I'd often move my mouse in a direction and click to charge, but it wouldn't take affect, and by the time I clicked again the direction prompt usually faded and I had to try again. You should implement input queuing for this and it'd feel a lot better.

Input queuing would also be good for after attacks, I often wanted to charge again but had to wait until the animation is done, which is annoying because I have enough in the world to think about than looking at the viewmodel animation.

The metroid prime map ui is amazing, placing markers is a cool idea too, I'm sure it will be more useful in the future.

I'd change the health from numbers to a bar, I thought the blue bar would be my health and didn't even notice the numbers until my third try after dying.

Everything is too hard and fast, maybe it'd be better with a proper introduction and level design, but traditionally skeletons are supposed to be the easiest enemy in these games.

I really like the aesthetic you're going for so far, keep working on it.

Thanks for playing. Sorry about that prompt, it's apparently built into newer version of Unity and I couldn't find a way to disable it even though all the analysis and connection stuff is disabled. I will look into it again.

Wow thank you for this. I'm glad you enjoyed the game. It was nice to read your thoughts on it. Cheers!

Thank you for your sacrifice.

This game is bursting with soul. I had a lot of fun with all the weapons and platforming, felt like I was always getting better.

I think the game could use a big art pass however; the camera is really close, would be nice to have more view of the surroundings to see where you're going and plan enemy encounters, it becomes very run-and-gun right now. The ui is hard to navigate and read, you throw it all at the player immediately and the names for each shop menu are pretty opaque about what it does; "Paintery" for example. Of course you can open them and grok it decently fast, though I'm still not sure where my points/money was displayed.

I also couldn't scroll the weapons menu, or any menu for that matter.

I'm sure you've got a plan for all this though. The base gameplay is super fun. Reminded me of Risk of Rain a bit, but if cactus had made it.

I didn't get a chance to try the multiplayer so you may be putting more effort towards that.

It's a fun game, I like the procedural levels and the progression on upgrades is pretty nice.

Small improvements I'd make:

  • UI could be more readable, the font is weird and you're thrown into the game without much time to look at things or figure out what's what.
  • Some screenshake would go a long way, though I understand if you're going more for Vampire Survivors-like with minimal juice to distract from the progression.
  • The directional audio feels very weird, it always sounded off so as not to be useful. I think the power of the guns would feel better if it was removed altogether.
  • Perhaps a pause screen when you walk over a gun so you can decide what to swap it with. You could even compare stats, fire rate, ammo type, etc. I suggest this because the only two times I died was when I tried to pick up a gun but couldn't determine when to press F and also was trying to switch to a gun I didn't want.
  • Reloading takes way too long. I think you're trying to encourage the player to switch weapons, but the arenas are so big and it's so easy to strafe around enemies that I'd rather wait on the reload than change my concentration to which weapon would be better.

You got a good base here though, keep it going.

I enjoyed this one a lot, it was fun to mix and match the upgrades.

I found the idea of multiple guns confusing, do they all fire at the same time? Or were there more buttons I was missing. I couldn't tell if there was a balance to the amount of guns I should have vs having fewer, other than dispersing upgrades.

The wireframe art is excellent and I appreciate the accurate Bresenham lines that most people miss.

As a final note: The arenas always felt too tight to me, maybe shrink the enemies or give a bigger play area.

Amazing game, the mechanics were great and well explored. Surprisingly long game for a jam. I'd be interested in a full release.

I wanted the 'Plant' theme to be planting packages at different way stations, but didn't have time to complete that aspect. I also used some CC0 sprites from OpenGameArt, hopefully that's okay.

I've played this demo many times, one of my favourite games here. That said, I really think the game would sing if you overhauled the level scale and movement speed; it's extremely slow to walk anywhere, lots of dead air. Rooms are chunky and empty and often take up the entire screen, feels weird and like I'd never need to look over into other rooms to plan.

I'd also like terminal shortcuts, maybe binding commands to function keys like an MMO could be useful. Or writing your own batch scripts.

It's kind of between the accessibility of Quadrilateral Cowboy and Hotline Miami, but trying to have the depth of Cogmind and NetHack. But the gameloop is always the same in every level; hack stuff, get thing, go back. Hacking stuff has a cost sure, but if you do it wrong then you basically soft fail the level until you're dead and start over. I don't feel like I can find any crazy roguelike/simulation exploits.

I think you have a ton of potential for more because the aesthetic and ideas are genius, it just shouldn't take 6-10 seconds to walk across a room.

bagäboosögama

https://ryantrawick.itch.io/vorticity

Really fun, easy to control game. Would like bigger bullets. Solid aesthetic.

I like the premise a lot, I think more enemies sooner would be a lot of fun, also increasing the movement speed and making the camera less floaty. Audio was mixed super loud. Perhaps a tower-defense of some sort could be fun and make the four entrances a little more engaging. Attacking ghosts felt really good.